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The Meaning of Addiction: DSM-5 Gives the Lie to Addiction as a Chronic Brain Disease

By Stanton Peele, JD, PhD | August 24, 2010
Dr Peele was a member of the advisory group for substance-use disorders for DSM-IV, but has no involvement in DSM-5.

Although Charles O’Brien, MD, who heads the substance-related disorders work group, is a vigorous proponent of the notion of addiction as a disease, nothing about the proposed DSM-5 substance-related disorders section supports the idea that the syndrome is best understood as a chronic brain disease.

The return to the terminology of “addiction” and “addictive disorders” (replacing dependence) to subsume substance problems immediately calls into question the classic biochemical model of addiction, which at one time was applied solely to heroin and other narcotics, and then expanded to incorporate cocaine and marijuana, drugs with entirely different chemical and pharmacological profiles. DSM-5 expands the list of drugs now labeled capable of causing addiction well beyond this.

Indeed, it is not clear which drugs cannot result in addiction in susceptible individuals under the right conditions. This, of course, undercuts the whole notion that substances with specific molecular characteristics link with receptor sites hypothesized to unlock the brain’s addictive response. Of course, identifying compulsive gambling as addictive makes the idea that there is an exclusive chemical pathway corresponding with an addictive brain reward system unlikely to the point of fantastical.

But, ultimately, what conclusively refutes the cherished idea that addiction can be traced to a characteristic brain pattern (one measurable by a PET scan) is the gradated severity scale on which addictive disorders are to be scored by DSM-5. As the AA saying does, “You can’t be partially alcoholic (according to AA’s disease notion of alcoholism), any more than you can be partly pregnant.” But DSM-5 says that you can be -– as DSM-IV likewise did with its abuse and partial remission categories.  This of course corresponds with epidemiologic data (cf. NESARC) that show people waxing and waning on dependence measures over their lifetimes (more often waning), often within a relatively short time frame.

I have been proposing an experiential model of addiction from the time I wrote Love and Addiction (1975) and The Meaning Addiction (1985). I conceive addiction as a more or less pathological adherence to an involvement - – defined by its experiential benefits for an individual in a specific life circumstance (eg, the Vietnam War theater, adolescence) –- as measured by its negative consequences (more or less as laid out in DSM-IV and repeated in DSM-5). And each subsequent rendition of DSM seems more closely to approximate my model.

[Editor's note: For more on addiction, see New Definition of Addiction: A Chronic Brain Disease, a podcast by Dr Michael Miller, Past President, American Society of Addiction Medicine.]

 

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by Barry Hames | September 05, 2010 9:12 PM EDT

I have written an article challenging the disease concept: http://healthmad.com/addiction/alcoholism-and-drug-addiction-as-spiritual-maladies-a-challenge-to-the-disease-concept/ I would appreaciate any comments there. I have worked as an addictions therapist for 26 yrs

by Susan Haney | September 30, 2010 11:49 PM EDT

I wonder if "addictionology"should be classified as a chronic lifelong biochemical brain disease.  This "science" was invented by self-identified addicts and alcoholics who truly believe that they have a lifelong biochemical brain disease that can only be cured by lifelong abstinence from an arbitrary list of potentially rewarding substances, fundamental religious conversion, and narcissistic (delusional?) prostetlyzing about their own "spiritual transformation" from this practice.  The fact that this practice has become instutionalized by various financial and political interests in medicine and law does not change the fact that it is a free and widely available form of "faith healing" that doesn't work for everyone, and that does not (and should not) constitute the practice of medicine. 

by Diane Lundquist | October 26, 2010 3:01 PM EDT

Substance abuse and dependence for many is a bad habit that can be broken with the correct support and tools. Moderation Management (moderation.org) has shown that many people can break harmful patterns of alcohol use by concentrating on why and when they drink----and avoiding situations in which they might overdrink. Of course, it takes time to break a habit, but in the interim, a user can practice Harm Reduction and slowly improve their behavior. Dr Peele was instrumental in the early days of MM and continues to be of value to the group.

by Thomas Patitucci | November 17, 2010 1:21 PM EST

Thomas Patitucci

I have always had a problem with the concept that a  voluntary behavior which is harmful can be construed as a biochemical imbalance in ones brain. I understand the biproduct of use is addiction and may cause a biochemical imbalance in ones brain however the cure is just stop doing it. For most people with a substance abuse problem it can be best defined as poor coping mechanism for life issues. There is ample evidence to demonstate that brain scans with similiar results produce different obseverable behaviors.

Therefore we are focusing on behavior and one can choose just to stop, modify ones behavior, cope and move on with ones life. How is this a biochemical imbalance in ones brain?  Yes some people are suseptable to the effects of a drug and can completely dependendent rapidly but drinking or shotting up is an action by a person which they have choosen to perform. If it were a desease one could not choose to have it go away.

by Linda Felix | November 22, 2010 1:38 PM EST

I work with individuals in recovery from chemical dependence.  Many times I've heard the comment that the first sip of alcohol taken, even if they were a child under ten, was an experience for them of great pleasure.  If I observe these comments with utter simplicity, I just can't help but wonder why most people I know without chemical dependency issues were repelled bythe taste of alcohol the first time they tried it.  Just a thought.

As far as genetics are concerned, I've been led to believe there is no absolute gene for addiction, but I'm not sure what kind of light twin studies throw into this mix.

Anyone know more about this?

Article Comment Pages: 1 2 3 Next






References
Peele S, Brodsky A. Love and Addiction. New York: Taplinger; 1975.
Peele S. The Meaning of Addiction. Lexington, MA: Lexington Books; 1985.


 
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